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5 - Poverty and Education in England: a School System in Crisis

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 March 2021

Ian Thompson
Affiliation:
University of Oxford
Gabrielle Ivinson
Affiliation:
Manchester Metropolitan University
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Summary

Introduction

The United Kingdom (UK) is a shockingly unequal society (Ball, 2003; Thompson, 2017; Dorling, 2018). Government statistics show that in 2019 the numbers of children living in absolute poverty had risen by 200,000 in a year to a total of 3.7 million. In England, the experience of education for children depends on where you live (Ball, 2018). The strong link between social disadvantage and poor educational outcomes is well documented in the research literature as have been the effects of poverty on young people's mental and physical health and wellbeing. Evidence from empirical research studies and statistical analyses has repeatedly shown that the most economically disadvantaged students andor with a special educational need (SEN) have the poorest educational outcomes in England in terms of educational achievement (Strand, 2014) and emotional wellbeing (Ridge, 2009). Children's experience of schooling is heavily influenced by the level of disadvantage that they face in their lives (Horgan, 2007) and their social class positions still heavily influence the opportunities open to them (Shildrick and Rucell, 2015). Cooper and Stewart (2013), in a systematic review of the literature, found that money makes a significant difference to the material outcomes of children's lives. School absence rates in England are higher for pupils claiming free school meals (FSM): 7.6%, compared to 4.3% for nonFSM pupils. The persistent absence rate for pupils who were eligible for FSM of 23.6% was more than twice the rate for those pupils not eligible (DfE, 2019a). Research has also shown that in England educational inequalities surface in the preschool years (Sylva et al, 2004), but that they continue to widen in both primary and secondary school years (Connelly et al, 2014). Children's experience of schooling is heavily influenced by the level of disadvantage that they face in their lives (Horgan, 2007; Bibby et al, 2017) and their social class still strongly influences the opportunities open to them (Shildrick and Rucell, 2015; Ball, 2018). The overwhelming evidence in England is that the potential of many young people from disadvantaged backgrounds is not currently met by school systems (Ball, 2016; Thompson, 2017).

Type
Chapter
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Poverty in Education across the UK
A Comparative Analysis of Policy and Place
, pp. 115 - 140
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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